4.6 Review

How DNA and RNA Viruses Exploit Host Chaperones to Promote Infection

Journal

VIRUSES-BASEL
Volume 13, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/v13060958

Keywords

chaperones; viruses; infection; polyomavirus SV40; human papillomavirus; flavivirus; coronavirus; endoplasmic reticulum; Golgi

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R01DK111174, R01AI150897, R01AI064296]
  2. NIH [T-32-GM007315]

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Viruses use host molecular chaperones to enter, replicate, and assemble within host cells. DNA viruses like polyomavirus and human papillomavirus utilize soluble and membrane-associated chaperones, while RNA viruses like flavivirus and coronavirus co-opt cytosolic and organelle-selective chaperones. This highlights the significance of host chaperones in virus infection and potential for novel antiviral strategies.
To initiate infection, a virus enters a host cell typically via receptor-dependent endocytosis. It then penetrates a subcellular membrane, reaching a destination that supports transcription, translation, and replication of the viral genome. These steps lead to assembly and morphogenesis of the new viral progeny. The mature virus finally exits the host cell to begin the next infection cycle. Strikingly, viruses hijack host molecular chaperones to accomplish these distinct entry steps. Here we highlight how DNA viruses, including polyomavirus and the human papillomavirus, exploit soluble and membrane-associated chaperones to enter a cell, penetrating and escaping an intracellular membrane en route for infection. We also describe the mechanism by which RNA viruses-including flavivirus and coronavirus-co-opt cytosolic and organelle-selective chaperones to promote viral endocytosis, protein biosynthesis, replication, and assembly. These examples underscore the importance of host chaperones during virus infection, potentially revealing novel antiviral strategies to combat virus-induced diseases.

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